The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Spectacle Blog

My letter in response to Sen. Jim Webb's eye-opening constitutional scholarship of last week runs in the Wall Street Journal today here. As submitted in slightly longer form:

Sen. Webb's Perpetual Legal Motion Machine

Let me get Sen. Jim Webb's argument straight ("Rockefeller Bill Was Our Best Hope", Letters, April 13). He writes that for Congress to amend the Clean Air Act to return it to the way it was written and interpreted for 35 years -- until the Supreme Court in Massachusetts v. EPA said it actually means something very different -- would be in 'violation of the Supreme Court holding in' that case. Separation of powers, like the Constitution itself, truly is a thing of the past in some quarters.

A legislator, of all people, argues that when the Court speaks on the meaning of a statute that reading is locked in amber. That no matter if a majority in Congress disagree, or simply want to change the law for whatever reason, the peoples' representatives are hogtied. I suppose repeal is out of the question.

Justice Scalia noted in his dissent that this opinion apparently delivered on stone tablets "defies common sense", and even EPA agrees, formally claiming that its own implementation of Mass. v. EPA leads to "absurd results". So absurd in fact that the agency must rewrite the statute to accommodate their otherwise absurd reading of the statute. Well, that's ok. The Court has spoken. And it's not like they're Congress or anything, is which case the revision would be intolerable brigandage. What a world.

Perpetual motion machines remain elusive. But now we have the notion of the perpetual statute which, once written and interpreted, can never be pruned. Only expanded, by the unelected. How ironic, then, that it is the environmentalists who ritually invoke the specter of Frankenstein, of unleashing horrors on the world which slip the bonds of human control.

The more our political class speak, the better the Tea Partiers sound.

View all comments (7) | Leave a comment

Rogue Elephant| 4.20.11 @ 2:14PM

Tyranny, plain and simple.

Kyle| 4.20.11 @ 2:21PM

Who are we to argue when the ruling class speaks? Webb's an ass.

Occam's Tool| 4.20.11 @ 3:21PM

Webb is a blithering nincompoop. Hard to believe that once he was Reagan's SecNav.

You know, the bit in his biographical data where his law professor used the example of a Marine named "Webb" in a drug smuggling operation to piss him off used to engender sympathy in me for Webb. Now, given his excessive asshattery, I've come to regard it as payment for Karma to be incurred.

Kenny| 4.20.11 @ 4:29PM

Thank heavens this clown will no longer be polluting the U.S. Senate as of Jan. 2013.

One of Webb's books was entitled "Born Fighting. " Perhaps his biography should be entitled "Born Stupid."

Tom| 4.20.11 @ 4:42PM

As a Virginia resident, I deeply regret that I will NOT have the oppurtunity to vote AGAINST Jim Webb in 2012.

chemman| 4.20.11 @ 6:23PM

If I recall correctly the Constitution has a clause that allows Congress to exclude court review of items if it so chooses.

allblues| 4.22.11 @ 3:01PM

Maybe not macaca, just plain ca ca.

Leave a Comment

N.B. We encourage readers to share and discuss their thoughtful and relevant comments about this Spectator article. Comments are routinely monitored and will be deleted if profane, bigoted, or grossly impolite. Please be respectful. (And don't feed the trolls!) Thank you.

More Blog Posts by Chris Horner

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/04/20/sen-webbs-perpetual-legal-moti

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

Special Feature

Better that we become a nation of choosers rather than beggars. Our symposium on choice from the May, 2012 issue:

A Time for Choosing

James Piereson

The Road from Serfdom

Stephen Moore and Peter Ferrara

FLASHBACK TO: 1984

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

Meet the Flukes!

F. H. Buckley | 5.25.12

The Wisconsin Turning Point

Peter Ferrara | 5.23.12

In Search of Muhammad

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi | 5.25.12

Age and Kyl

Quin Hillyer | 5.25.12

Follow Me

Jay D. Homnick | 5.25.12

A Test of National Honor

Hal G.P. Colebatch | 5.25.12

How About the Record of DOE Capital?

William Tucker | 5.25.12

The Great Debate

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. | 5.24.12

ADVERTISEMENT